SafeSpeed wrote:
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Even if it is less that 15% of drivers, thats still alot of drivers.
How is 'less than 15%' any number greater than zero? 15% is the absolute maximum. If asked to guess I'd give it about 3 or 4%. Yes, it's still a lot of drivers - around a million.
So we're agreed - its a lot of drivers.
ndp wrote:
And surely if you're assuming that 15% are driving too fast, then you are making an assumption which is even bolder than mine - that *at least* 85% of drivers are correct in the assessment of their speed.
Nonsense. A good 20% of them are probably driving inappropriately slowly.[/quote]
"Inappropriately slowly"? Would you care to define this?
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I'd expect at least 60% to be 'wholly correct' in assessment of speed given their skills level and vehicle type.
I'd expect people to be able to spot a diamond-grade-backed camera and drive past it at below the speed limit - yet so many fail at this simply task. If drivers are choosing an appropriate speed
ndp wrote:
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And hell, yes, I'm 100% certain of it.
On what grounds?
Mostly grounds we have discussed.
Speeding is far more prevalent than speed related crashes.
Excessive speed crashes are rare.[/quote]
But this is all based on accident stastics, and the assumption that a factor is not cited by a reporting officer then that factor certainly wasn't a factor. This is deeply flawed.
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Crashes, especially injury crashes are rare.
Indeed. Doesn't mean we shouldn't do anything about crashes.
Ditto speed related crashes (even if they are as rare as you claim)
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The bottom line is that if you're driving significantly too fast for the conditions it simply isn't possible to react to events and the risk of a crash rises very rapidly.
I don't think anyone disputes this.
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And there's nowhere near enough of these crashes to indicate that normal experienced motorists are getting into this kind of trouble.
But again, this is based on treating accident reports as gospel, as opposed to what they really are.
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On the other side of the same coin we should look at the subsconscious risk assessment processes that drivers run all the time. When there's danger ahead they slow down. This is the essence of the driving process.
No, they slow down when they *perceive* there to be a danger to *them* ahead. Where they fail to consider others, or fail to perceive a hazard, then they can't hope to set their speed accordingly. This isn't incompetance, its simply human fallibility - hence we have limits to act as ceilings to cover for this scenario.
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And when you do look at crash causes,
We've done this - accidents aren't caused, they are arrived that from a set of circumstances.
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carelessness and inattention at right there at the top of the list,
Does this include inattention to their speed and/or the speed limit?
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probably accounting for more than 80% of all crashes.
"Probably"?
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Limits are useful so long as we don't get too obssessed with them. Remember 60% of drivers are 'speeding' on most road types according to DfT figures. Yet excessive speed crashes (which also include inappropriate speed within the speed limit) are a seriously rare.
Thats based on accident records, which are often pretty dubious.
I hear this sort of claim a lot. While I agree that there are problems it usually arises because the facts don't fit the framework of ideas. That's no surprise to me, because the framework of ideas being applied nationally is WAY out. 'Totally divorced from reality' would sum it up.
I'm sure the fact that accident records are usually simply the opinion of what the attending officer can confidently say was involved. And usually nothing more scientific.
ndp wrote:
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And when they do crop up it's more typically a hazard perception failure than a careless use of speed.
Indeed, but sometimes that hazard perception failure is due to the nature of the road cf something that the driver cannot detect, or where the nature of the road is misleading. Hence limits.
Theres also the issue of keeping consequences within acceptable limits, of course.
We went there yesterday. Would you be happy if we kept child pedestrian fatalities to the 10% expected at 20mph impacts? (I note that the latest DfT re-interpretation of the data puts the 20mph fatality percentage at 2.5% - but that's
more than 6 times worse than the figure we're achieving in 30 and 40mph speed limits with ~60% speeding.)[/quote]
So whats your solution? And how will it deal with the child who runs out at the last minute (and they will, they don't know better).
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Bottom line: Sticking to the speed limit WON'T stop you crashing and it WON'T reduce crash severity.
No one is saying it will - but it reduces the risk.
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More work on 'appropriate speed' and hazard perception will. More work on skills and attitudes will.
No it won't, it'll simply reduce the risk.
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Proper roads policing (targeting the risky) will.
No it won't, it'll simply reduce the risk.